Windows 8 – RTM

August 27, 2012

4 min read

I have been using Windows 8 Preview(s) for last one month as my main OS, two weeks back I moved to Windows 8 RTM got from my MSDN Ultimate subscription. I believe there is no upgrade path from Preview to final bits, so I didn’t try it. Instead I formatted the partition & installed “fresh” Windows 8 Release bits. My Workstation is a Dual-Boot setup with Windows 7 (for contingency) & Windows 8.

Everything I was using in Windows 7 got installed just fine in Windows 8:

Desktop Apps that I use regularly – KeePass, MS Office 2010 (Office 2013 in Beta so I skipped), iTunes, Paint.NET, Skype, Adobe Acrobat Pro X, Windows Live Writer (which I am using to write my blog-posts including this one), Windows Live Mail (I am waiting for Windows 8 Mail app to evolve), Google Chrome (for using multiple profiles) & VLC Player. I am using K7 Computing Ultimate Security as the Antivirus solution. I miss having the Windows 7 Games (Freecell, Solitaire) in Windows 8. I tried to copy them from Windows 7 Partition, but I was not able to get them to work. Microsoft is releasing their equivalents through Windows Store as Windows8 Apps.

Instead of launching Applications every time from Start screen I pinned shortcuts to Desktop & Taskbar the once I frequently use. You can see the screenshots below:

(Shown above) Application shortcuts for quick launch from Desktop

(Shown above) Frequently used Desktop Applications that are pinned in TaskBar

The Windows 8 (Metro) Apps that I am using for now are a combination of:

Out of Box Apps like Messaging, Bing News/Finance/Sports/Finance & Weather, these look good & work fine too. I don’t like the Mail, Photos, Music & Video Apps, in my view they need significant improvements before they can challenge their Desktop equivalents (Windows Live Mail, Photo Gallery, Windows Media Player & VLC Player).

Windows Store Apps like tweeTRO, Wikipedia, OneNote MX, Microsoft Solitaire Collection, Microsoft Minesweeper, Dictionary.com & few others. I feel many of these Apps though impressive feel like early iterations. I am sure by the time Windows 8 officially launches in October end they will be significantly improved. You can see the screenshots of my Start Screen below:

Many of the common Windows Applets & Configuration Panels are still available in Windows 8, but it takes a bit of effort to search them through Search Charm before you can find them. One of them I was looking for was “Windows Backup” which is a hidden-jewel that ships in every copy of Windows Vista & above. If you are using 100% Windows 8 Apps you may not need this and the new “File History” backup which saves copies of your documents will do the needful. But in my case I was using majority of Desktop Applications which I have painfully configured & I can’t risk of losing / reinstalling. So I needed the full “System” backup provided by Windows Backup. After a bit of searching you can get to it either by using Search Charm, look for Backup, find File History & then navigate from there (or) go to Control Panel and use “All Control Panel Items” and look for “Windows 7 File Recovery” (as it is called now). You can see the screenshots below.

The need for these Windows 7 Applications will go down (hopefully) over the months as Microsoft releases their equivalents as Windows 8 (Metro) apps through Windows Store.

Overall using Windows 8 for few weeks I found it be significantly faster than Windows 7 (which I consider to be the Best Desktop OS in the planet) & I love it. Internet Explorer feels comparable & even better than Google Chrome for everyday usage. One tip I can offer to smoothen your experience with Windows 8 will be to suggest you to familiarize yourself with Windows Key Keyboard Shortcuts (they are a blessing, especially Win+D, Win+X & so on) & reading the “Getting around in Windows 8” blog post by Windows team.